Newspaper Page Text
4 A
AEPLYING TO GOV, SLATON
Opposes Extension of ‘Freight Carry
ing’ by Government Because He
Fears Federal Ownership of Rail
roads and Rise of Mail Order Houses.
Thomas W. Hardwick gave out a reply Saturday night to
Governor Slaton's card of last Sunday, in which the Congressman
gefends and explains his position on the currency law, the parcel
ost and the State equalization law. |
Mr. Hardwick says frankly that he opposes any further ex
tension of the parcel post, but states that he would not, if elected
Benator, move the repeal of the present law.
His card follows: ‘
In his card of last Sunday Mr. Sla
ton made a touching, though unnec
essary, defense of working people,
eguch as clerks, from my savage as
saults. This appeals to my sense of
humor. 1 have not had a very easy
time in lfe, and [ expect [ have far
more sympathy for the working peo
ple of Georgla, and am fn much closer
touch with them, than Mr. Slaton
ever has been or ever can be. The
“hirelings” to whom I referred were
the political henchmen of Mr. Slaton,
who seem to have been employed to
make silly attacks on me, for which
their employer escapes responsibility.
i Mr. Slaton’s deep solicitude in be
half of the party, the State and the
country over my absence from Wash
{ington just at this juncture {9 equally
touching and almost equally disin
terested. No doubt, he prefers that 1
ghould be in Washington, or almost
anywhere else except in Georgla, just
now. Let me reassure him on one
point: 1 am neglecting no duty I owe
at Washington in order to prosecute
this campaign. In the early stages
of the campaign, while the House was
fn general debate, under an order
fixing a day ceriain for voting on the
anti-trust bills, 1 came to Georgin
and began the actlve and regular
prosecution of my CaAnvass, When the
time fixed for veting on these bills
arrived, 1 suspended my CANVASS, re
turned to Washington and helped pass
the bills }
“House Marking Yime.” }
. Now, while the Mouse Is marking
time, awalting Senate action on these
bills, which constitute the last part
of the legislative program of the
;‘\arty for the present sesslon, I am
ere In Georgla, meeting and apeak -
ing to the Democrats of Georgla.
Whenever my party or my constitu
ency needs my services in Wash!ing
ton, whether in the House or in com
mittee, 1 will be there.
In this connection let me inquire of
Mr. Blaton how the State of Georgla,
with its Leglslature In session, man
aged to stagger along without ship
wreck in the absence of Its great
Governor last Monday while he was
making a political address to the vot
ers of Bartow County, or on last
Wednesday while he was making a
gpeech to the editors of the weekly
rewspapers at Commerce, Ga.? Ailso,
how can he find time to get away
from the Capitol with the Legislature
in session to make political addresses
alone, and still ind no time for the
joint discussion that his conduct and
cards invited?
. TR RS M T o
*Mr. Slaton, one of the chlef oppo
nents in Georgia of President Wilson,
seems preatly worried over the char
acter of the support I have given the
President of my cholce and the Ad
ministration of my party, especlally
in reference to the currency bill. Let
Mr. Slaton forget it. 1 will never be
a “me, too,” statesman, and blindly
agree to everything that anybody.
even my closest friend, suggests 1
am not buflt that way. 1 have a
mind and a conscience of my own,
and 1 follow them both. So I shall
when 1 go to the Senate. 1 like to
agree with my friends, and do, when
1 think they are right. 1 never do
when 1 think they are wrong. Close
as has been my friendship with Pres
icent Wilson, and deep as is my ad
miration for that great man, I do not
suppose 1 will ever agree with him or
anybody else about everything that
comes along, and, as earnestly as 1
may support him and his Adminis
tration, 1 shall never hesitate to stand
for what 1 think is right, according to
my best lights, Georgia ought to ex
pect that of her Senators. ]
What of the parcel post and the 's
gue on that question that Mr, Sh\l\ml
thinks he raises with me?
In the spring of 1909 a numbher of |
representatives of the Farmers' Uni m
held a conference with a number nf!
Southern and Western members of
Congress. At that cenference I w;u!
present by invitation. 1 suggested
that we fight for a rural parcel post —
one confined to the rural routes. The)
express companies gave service to
every part of the country except to its
rural sections, though thelr rates were
much too high. No private axvu«‘fl
could he devised to serve, generally,
the rural sections of the country
While the express rates, along the
railroads, were too high still, ample
and complete power had been given to
the Interstate Commerce Commission
to regulate those rates and reduce
them, to & reasonable basis. This had
been given in 1806 in the Hepburn
railroad rate bhill. The Commission
had not exercised the power, but was
preparing and promising to do so
Prompt and effectual action in this
regard could protect the people who
lived in cities and towns, but the peo
ple who lived in rural sections could
get no such service, unless the Gov
ernment gave it 1o them, through the
rural route system
. Amendment Offered.
After mmmne discussion, this was, |
think, generally accepted, and in ac
cordance with it 1 first tried to get an
amendment considered in the House
in connection with the postoffice ap
propriation bill to try an experiment
al parcel post, on the rural routes,
just as we had established, in the he
kkiflhinfi‘ an experimental rural freo
TRIPOD PAINT CO.
&7 and 3% North Pryor Streel
Manufacturers.
Wheolesale and Reta
Paints, Stains,
Varnishes, Etc.
Bell Phone 4710, Atianta 408
delivery system. The amendment I
offered was ruled out on a technical
point of order under the rules.
1 followed it up by introducing a
bill to the same effect, which 1 pressed
and argued at length before the Podi
office Committee of the House April
22, 1909, The Republican party, then
in control of the House, and its com
mittees denied us even this experi
mental rural parcel post. Nothing
was done in the matter until after the
Democrats had carrled the House and
assumed itg control. During the con
slderation of the postoflice appropria
tion bill tn 1912 Mr. Henry, of Texaa,
from the Committee on Rules, report
ed a special rule whereby the consid
eration of the parcel post questiin
was allowed.
1 closed the debate for the Com
mittee on Rules (Congresslonal Rec
ord, volume 48, part L, page 5003),
defending the rule against Republican
asasult and arguing for Its adoption.
The house adopted it, and as a result,
April 30, 1912, it voted upon a propo
gitlon offered by Mr. Moon, of Ten
nessee, providing a parcels system
confined to the rural routes of the
country and with a welght Hmit of
eleven pounds. This was exactly in
accordance with the suggestion I had
made to the conference [ have refer
red to, and precisely what I had stood
for in the heated Congressional cam
palgn of 1910 in the Tenth District
of Georgla. The Moon proposition
also provided a commission to study
the subject of a general parcel post
throughout the country.
Present Law Compromise,
Subgequently, under legislation en
acted in 1913, we have established
the present parcel post svstem, at
viding the country into elght zones
and fixing the postage on parcels ac
cording to the distance transported,
with a weight limit of 50 pounds on
local business, not to be carried more
than 150 miles, and with a welght
limit of twenty pounds on all pack
ages to be transported more than 150
miles. Such ls the present law, As
is true, in most casrs, it was the re
sult of compromise between extreme
and conflicting views
It will be observed that the welght
limit on all packages that are trans
ported more than 160 miles s twenty
pounds, and the postage iz based
strictly on the weight of the package
and the distance {t is to travel
Frankly, this was a greater ven
ture upon the husiness of transport
ing freight for hire than I wanted to
see this Government make, but it was
s 0 much more reasonable and mod
erate a proposition than many sub
mitted that 1 made no special effort
to defeat it, and since its establish
ment have made no effort to repeal
it. I have no plan or purpose to at
tempt its repeal if elected to the Sen
ate, becauge I am willing to accept it
ap a compromise, for fear that we
may go further and do worse. 1
shall, however, oppose any extension
of the system beyvond (ts present
limit for the following reasons
i His Reasons.
1. We have already given the farm
ers the rural route parcel post serv
lce that they are entitled to and that
will give them this service that they
can obtain in no other way.
2. Because | am a sound Democrat,
' and belleve that the one and only
'business in which the Government
ought to engage is the business of
governing. lam opposed, on princt
ple, to the Government engaging in
| the dry goods business, the grocery
| business, or even the business of car
rving freight for hire,
l 3, If the Government embarks, on a
i!.-.rre scale, in the business of trans
porting freight for hire in connection
' with the mails, it will be certain to
‘ impede, obstruct and delay the prompt
' carriage and delivery of the mails—
-5:»» result will be that we finally will
| “get our mail by freight, and our
ifxnizht by mail"
| 4. 1f the Government sto embark,
on a large scale, in the business of
| transporting fraight for hire, whether
at a profit or at a loss, the inevitable
result of the enterprise will be that it
must acquire and operate the agen
| cies of transportation. In other words,
| it must take over and operate the
! raflroads of the country, The Gov
!nrnmv:n ownership and operation of
{ the railroads is, to my mind, fraught
Evnh so much peril, both to our Gov
{ ernment and our country, that I can
in\\( contemplate the possibility with
e ettt ee e e .
{ SUMMER RESORTS.
| WHITE PATH HOTEL, WHITE
| PATH, GA.
| IN Blue Ri3ge Mountains; pure, cold
@rings and mineral waters; charming
| scenery country fare. rates, $7.00 t¢
{ $10.50 per week Postal brings descrip
jtion. T. H Tabor, Proprietor
1 X
BONTA-NARRAGANSETT
BROADWAY AT 94TH STREET
NEW YORK
Makes its appeal to those seek
ing comfort and entertainment at
moderate cost. The only hotel in
the moetropolis operated sucoess
fully without a bar.
The Sunday evening conocerts,
with sacred music and speeches on
current topics by the guests, in
augurated June 28, have received
A. K. BONTA
TWARST'e SUNDAT AMERIUAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1914
Mrs. H. P. Whitney Helps Fair
Lends Beautiful New Fountain
To Be Only Marble On Grounds
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@ 12:% b¥ FANATIA-RAL IND DXPOSITION £O-
New York Society Woman’s Splendid Work to
Girace California Building Patio.
NEW YORK, July 18.—The volun
tary contribution of a sculptured
fountain has been made to the Pana-*
ma-Pacific International Exposition
by Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, the
New York soclal leader who turned
sculptress.
The fountain, which will rank with
the most beautiful of the artistic
works that decorate the buildings and
courts of the exposition, is also to
be the only bit of marvle to be
placed on the grounds at San Fran
clsco,
All of the other sculptures are in
the Imitation travertine marble,
which obtains throughout the con
struction of the exposlition.
Mrs. Whitney's fountain is com
posed of three upright nude figures
complacency or acquiesce in any step
that leads to that result.
Mail Order Houses.
5. If the Government establishes a
parcel post system with a large
freight limit, say of 100 pounds, or
even of 250 pounds, as some of its
most rabid and radical proponents
urge, then the inevitable and unes
capable tendency will be to concen
trate the mercantile business of the
country into a few large cities in the
hands of a few great mail order
houses—a large class of our citizens
will be deprived both of their means
and opportunity to earn a livelthood,
without compensatory results to the
general public that would justify
such a radical and reckless upsetting
of the business conditions of our
State and country.
For all of these reasons, while I do
not proposa a destruction of the pres
ent parcel post, with fits twenty
pound limit on all except local busi
ness, 1 certainly do oppose any fur
ther extension of the system.
| [ suspect that Mr. Slaton has
stumbled head foremost into a far
bigger issue than he anticipated. H!s'
cards, so far, do not indicate a very
profound or accurate knowledge of
the merits of the questions. I believe
his purpose was to seek votes at my
expense by attempting to excite the
prejudices of one class of our cln"‘
zens, and most unjustly, against me.
If 1 do him injustice, however, and
he really wishes to take serious is
gne with me on my views and posi
tion in this matter, 1 am prepared to
give ,battle In that event, since I
‘h:\w stated my own position and
views, and accurately, let. me ask
him a few questions
Asks Slaton Questions.
1. Does Mr. Slaton favor any ex
tension of the present parcel post
system?
2. If so, to what weight Hmit on
pagcels that travel over 'l5O miles?
Would he ga 230 pounds, to 100
pounds, to 50 pounds, or where?
3. Does Mr. Slaton favor the zone
system, or the flat rate system?
Would he assess the postage not only
according to the weight of the pack
age, but also according to the dis
tance It is to travel, or wgquld he
assess according to weight, a fiat
rate regardless of distance, just as
ll\\'fl cents will carry a letter 1,000
v e oB A O A T
SUMMER RESORTS.
columns of favorable mention In
‘The New York Times, Herald, Sun,
Mall, ete.
| Seventy per cent of the rooms
overlook the Hudson River, and
the restaurant, seating four hun
dred (400) persons, is a source of
novm--endlng interest to rflonl
from out of town. Write for res
ervations and illustrated booklet.
supporting an ornate bowl—the pool
of the fountain,
The plece is to be placed in the
patio ‘of the California bullding,
where it will have a most advanta
geous setting, the patio being sur
rounded with the high cypress hedges
that once were a feature of the gar
dens of Harbor View.
The sculpture has been on exhlbi
tion in Knoedler's gallery here, where
it attracted the attention of many
sculptors of note, among them Karl
Ritter, chief of sculpture for the ex
position,
Learning that the California build
ing was to be the center of women'’s
activities during the exposition, Mrs.
Whitney offered, through Mr. Bitter,
to lend the fountain to the exposition.
miles and the same two cents is re
guired to carry it a mila?
4. Does Mr. Slaton, in his new
horn progressive zeal, favor the Gov
ernment ownership and operation of
railroads?
5. In what campaign, natfonal or
State, did Mr. Slaton ever champion
the cause of progress or reform, or
‘ever support a progressive candidate,
‘unless it were after nomination?
6. Was his tax act born of his re
cently developed love of the farmer?
‘Was it for that reason, when he
changed the farmers' system of tax
returns from the voluntary system
to the assessment plan, that he left
'the corporations who return to State
‘Receiver Wright, on the old basis of
voluntary returns? Did he put the
new system on the farmer and leave
'lt off of these corporations because
'he loved the farmer more and the
corporation less?
7. Is he trying to cuddle and be
fuddle the farmer on this parcel post
matter to make up to him for the in
jury he has done him with the tax
thn\, or does he reaily love the far
mer more and the merchant less? Or
|is his one true love the mail order
house?
THOMAS W. HARDWICK,
July 18, 1914
i A high, cool, healthful resort
-~ AR Win the heart of the Cumberland
- ! S Mountains of East Tennessee,
2 L an unexcelled climate.
5 Pt A o Modern hotel—one thousand acre
T N~ ;"} nark and grounds—eighteen hole golf
AS 2 A Y sourse—saddle horses—fine five-piece
\ g . orchestra for concerts and dancing
X . X\ | B and fhat most famous of ail American
N Q/" / Mineral Waters,
LW 57 TATE SPRING NATURAL
1y MINERAL WATER
"“/ i~/ always a help, nearly always a cure in indiges-
ADG) —~ tion, nervousness and all ailments attributable
N - to improper functions of the bowels, liver and
kidneys.
Rev. Dr. E. E. Hoss, Bishop Methodist Church, Nashville, Tenn., seym
*lt gives me the greatest pleasure to say that I regard Tate Spring water
@s the best remedy for all disorders of the stomach, bowels, liver, end kid
neys of which I have knowledge.”
Enjoy the healthful water at the spring or have it shipped to
your home. For sale by all druggists, in’ sterilized bottles, filled
and sealed at the spring.
Rates $l5 to $42 per week, according to loeation and num.
ber of persons oceupying room. Write for booklet.
TATE SPRING HOTEL
ON THE LINE OF THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY
S. B. ALLEN, MANAGING DIRECTOR
TATE SPRING. TENNESSEE |
Atlants Mineral Water Co. Distributors Tate Water. |
Ettor and Others of |. W. W, Are
in Textile District Organiz
ing the Operatives.
SPARTANBURG, 8. C., July 18.—
Cotton manufacturers here expressed
deep concern to-day over the coming
into South Carolina of organizers of
the Industrial Workers of the World.
Their advent has resulted In a strike
at Monaghan Mill at Greenville, and
it is feared there may be other strikes.'
Strikes in Southern cotton mills
have been rare heretofore because the
workers were not unionized. There
never has been a general strike of
textile workers in the South.
Joseph J. Ettor, one of the leaders
of the 1. W. W, movement, has come‘
to South Carolina from New England |
to survey the situation. He deliv
ered an address to the strikers at|
Monaghan Mill Thursday and they
seemed to be impressed by him, ‘
Refuses to Negotiate.
Lewls W. Parker, head of the Par-‘
ker Cotton Mills Company, a $12,-
000,000 corporation, of which thel
Monaghan Mill is a unit, held a con
ference with a committee of the strik- ‘
ers. They came to him as represen
tatives of the Industrial Workers of
the World. Mr. Parker tod them un
equivocally that he would have no
dealings of any kind with that or
ganization
Mr. Parker formerly was president
of the American Cotton Manufactur
ers’ Assoclation.
It is feared that {f the cotton mlll
workers of South Carolina should be
organized into a strong union and
they should at any time engage in a
general strike, it would be marked by
great violence.
Workers Are Mountaineers,
There are 60,000 cotton mill workers
in the State, many of whom have been
recruited from the remote mountain
districts of Tennessee and North
Carolina. They are rough, untumred‘
men, easily swaved by demagogues,
and dangerous when aroused.
The textile industry has only been
firmly established in South Carolina
twenty-filve years and has only been
one of the leading industries of the
State for about fifteen years.
Spartanburg 1s the textile center,
not only of South Carolina, but of the
entire South. There are thirty mills |
in this county, employving approxi
mately 10,000 hands. No other county
in the South has so many spindles as
Spartanburg County, and the number
is exceeded in only four New Eng
land counties.
If there should be extensive labor
trouble, therefore, this city would be
the storm center.
WANT THE DEPOT SOLD.
FORT WORTH, July 18.—Two add!-
tional suits were flled to-day against
the receivers of the Wabach Railroad
by firms which furnished material or
'did work on the new Wabash depnt
{n this city. The complaints ask for
an order of sale to be granted the
plaintiffs, and this has led to an in
teresting question. If the plaintiffs
are given judgment, will the depot be
sold? A majority of the firms that
did work on the depot or who fur
nished material for it have not yet re
| celved payment.
SUMMER RESORTS,
Connelly Springs, N. C. |
In Western North Carolina; right 1
on main line S. R. R.,, midway be
tween Salisbury and Asheville, N. C., |
mean elevation. Fine mineral wa- }
ter. Good fare. Modern conven- j
fences. Low rate May, June, Sep- }
tember and October, $6 to $8 er
week. July and August 37 to g]O
per week. Lower by month. Write
for booklet to
WILLIAM JEFF DAVIS,
Owner and Proprietor.
e ———————— T ————————
MUHRIS HuTEL Birmingham, Ala.
Fireproof. Euro
pean plan. Located in the heart of the
business section. Headquarters for com
mercial travelers. Large, well-lighted
sample rooms; hot and cold water in
all rooms. When in Birmingham, make
the Morris your home,
L. W. & G. W. SCOVILLE, Pro‘p(rletor..
Formerly of the Old and New imball,
Atlanta. Also owners and proprietors
of the Wigwam, Indian Springs.
5-Year Battle Puts |
All Tennessee Dry
‘Nuisance’ Law Finally Effects What
Previous Prohibition Statutes Nev
er Could Accomplish.
NASHVILLE, July 18.—It took five
years almost to the day to enforce
State-wide prohbition in Tennessee.
The general prohibition law that was
to have been effective in July of
1909 did not finally have the effect
of closing the saloons of the State
until July of this year, and only af
ter a bitter fight.
In the citles the law of 1909
was ignored as to the sale and the
question became more and more a[
political issue, and twice the fusionl
Legislators fllibustered and left the
State in their effort to maintain the
prohibition law when there was any
real or imagined fear that it would
be tampered with, At the last ses
slon of the General Assembly, bills
were urged by Governor Hooper for
more cerain prohibition and were
called, on account of their drastic
features, the “Hooper force bills.”
The law closing saloons by de
claring them a nulsance was passed
and became effective March 1. This
law has just run the gantlet of the
courts and having been passed on
favorably by the Supreme Court, It
is now invoked to wipé out the last
of the saloons in Tennessee
After closing nearly seventy liquor
shops in Nashville In one day and
permanently enjoining the operators
from reopening it is not thought that
there remains a single open saloon in
all Tennessee, and thus the dream of
the members of the W. C. T. U, who
flve years ago made the State Capitol
ring with ‘“Tennessee is Going Dry,”
Is at last realized.
l /|
1
For the past month—the month of brides—we have been busy furnishing |
homes for the Newlyweds. '
Young married folks have learned that this is truly their store. ‘
A store handling only dependable Furniture, Rugs, Curtains, Draperies
and complete house furnishings—all sold at the lowest prices consistent 3
with a safe business policy and sold on terms to suit the convenience of each ‘
customer. |
We extend you a cordial invitation to become one of our pleased cus- {
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Y Own 1 Will Do
our vwn ilerms § 0 ;
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Mail 8 ¥ s Pay Us
Orders ~ aVisit—
Receive g [t's Time
Prompt Well
Attention 62 PEACHTREE ' 61 N. BROAD Spent
Introduced by Letter, He Courted
Sweetheart of 74 12 Months,
Met First at Ceremony.
DENVER, COLO., July 18.—Fred
erick J. Stanton, 88, has just married
here Mrs, Eliza Johnson, 74. They
had never seen each other until the
day of the ceremony. They carried
on a courtship for twelve months by
mail. They were introduced to each
other by letter, and never even ex
changed photographs.
Stanton has been a constant resi
dent of this city for 64 years. He isa
professor of chemistry 1n the Denver
‘School of Mines and holds land and
real estate throughout Colorado and
Wyoming. He has been prominent in
politics, and is actively engaged in
the lodge work of the Independent
Order of Odd Fellows.
His 74-year-old bride was a resi
dent of Ames, lowa.
A year ago Professor Stanton was
corresponding with Mrs. Lucile Tay
lor, a widow living in Casper, Wyo.
It was at her suggestion and through
an introduction by letter that he
started to write to his present wife.
Soon, however, his letters began to
go more frequently to lowa than to
Wyoming. His letters to lowa in
creased in volume and length, and he
received as many as he sent,
Then the professor proposed mar
riage to the “Widow of Ames.” She
answered with a desirable monosyl
lable, and agreed to come to Denver
for the marriage.
SRS R NRS TR S e be s SRR R S eR e
MEDICINE e
CABINET 750 oA
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, .‘;Tlxaf"‘; o) ?r Value
Monday Oy c ‘
Buy Your $ 1 r!
Refrigerator Per Week
Here Monday '
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Solld ([ /o 0 !""fiufié “!ii,-?.a
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Insulation i g%’f— D
Priced $7.50 to $45
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' ' '
Came in White Blisters, Hard and
“Scaly, All of Hair Came Out.
Used Cuticura Soap and Cuti
cura Ointment, Head Well.!
i
Carthage, Texas.—''My MNttle girl had
eome kind of breaking out on her head thai
came in white blisters and when the blisters
B burst they formed something
’4@ like scales. 1f I washed her
’& a/* head and combed the scales
>t oft they would come again
Lo =<\ in just a few days. The
MQ\\\ trouble looked something
/7T | ke dandruft but was bard
i\ and scaly and when the
, \ scales would come off all of
\&‘f?‘“?fl?&"f F the hair came also and
l - would leave the head raw.
‘a“fl‘f«,,;_‘ ' “1 had tried salves which
‘?’ : . only softened the scales so
A 7 o NN
I decided to use Cuticura
Soap and Ointment. I washed her head
with warm water and Cuticura Soap and
then applied the Cuticura Ointment and
let it remain over night. I did not do this
butfabout four times before her head was
perfectly cured. I used only one box of
Cuticura Ointment and one bar of Cuticura
Soap and her head was well.” (Bigned)
Mrs. Luella Biggs, Jan. 28, 1914.
Samples Free by Mail
For face and hands Cuticura Soap and
Ointment are world favorites because so
effective in restoring the natural purity and
beauty of the skin, scalp, hair and hands
when marred by unsightly conditions. Al
though Cuticura Soap (23c.) and Cuticura
Ointment 1(50c.) are sold everywhere, a
sample of each with 32-p. Skin Book will
be sent free upon request. Address post~
card: ** Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston."